Category: hjmevxhh

Nadine Lustre’s phone stolen in Brazil After winning title, time for LA Tenorio to give back to Batangas folk Marañon’s absence will be a huge blow for the Busmen after he scored a tournament-leading 10 goals in the group and knockout stages, but Home will also miss top scorer Song Ui-young due to an injury.The Busmen retooled its squad in anticipation of a deeper run in the competition, adding Australian striker Blake Powell, national team players Curt Dizon and Paul Mulders, as well as goalkeeper Roland Muller and defender Jerry Barbaso. Manny Ott has also recovered from an eye socket surgery, while Patrick Reichelt, Omid Nazari and Mike Ott are in fine form.“Bienve is a big loss for us but I think the way our system is built, it’s not very much dependent on a single player,” said captain Martin Steuble.ADVERTISEMENT Lights inside SMX hall flicker as Duterte rants vs Ayala, Pangilinan anew Don’t miss out on the latest news and information. ‘High crimes and misdemeanors’: Trump impeachment trial begins View comments BACOLOD CITY—Newly-minted Philippines Football League champion Ceres-Negros seeks to grab the early advantage in the AFC Cup Asean zone final as it hosts Singaporean powerhouse Home United in the first leg Wednesday at Panaad Stadium.The rematch of last year’s Asean final won by the Bacolod-based side kicks off at 7 p.m. with the Busmen missing top scorer Bienvenido Marañon due to suspension following a red card in the second leg of the semifinals against Yangon United of Myanmar.ADVERTISEMENT Sports Related Videospowered by AdSparcRead Next Peza offers relief to ecozone firms Carpio hits red carpet treatment for China Coast Guard PLAY LIST 02:14Carpio hits red carpet treatment for China Coast Guard02:56NCRPO pledges to donate P3.5 million to victims of Taal eruption00:56Heavy rain brings some relief in Australia02:37Calm moments allow Taal folks some respite03:23Negosyo sa Tagaytay City, bagsak sa pag-aalboroto ng Bulkang Taal01:13Christian Standhardinger wins PBA Best Player award Palace OKs total deployment ban on Kuwait OFWs Judy Ann’s 1st project for 2020 is giving her a ‘stomachache’ For all of its impressive performances in the AFC Cup this year, however, the Busmen have struggled against the Singaporeans, whom they beat, 3-2, in over two legs in the final last year.Coach Risto Vidakovic isn’t about to deviate from his team’s philosophy despite their inability to beat Home this year. The two clubs battled to a 1-1 draw in Singapore in the group stage, before Home beat Ceres, 2-0, at Panaad in the return leg last April.FEATURED STORIESSPORTSGinebra beats Meralco again to capture PBA Governors’ Cup titleSPORTSAfter winning title, time for LA Tenorio to give back to Batangas folkSPORTSTim Cone still willing to coach Gilas but admits decision won’t be ‘simple yes or no’“I think they (Home) will play the same way so we’ll have to try and play our own brand of football,” said Vidakovic, whose team averaged 66 percent possession and created 15 chances per outing in the lead up to the final. “It’s a new game and a very important game. For us, its a historic game and we want to repeat history [by winning the final].”The second leg is set on Aug. 8 at Jalan Besar Stadium in Singapore. The winner on aggregate will advance to the inter-zone semifinals against North Korea on April 25. MOST READ LATEST STORIES Gov’t in no rush to rescue animals in Taal Shooting sets lofty target: Olympic gold In fight vs corruption, Duterte now points to Ayala, MVP companies as ‘big fish’read more

When the 60 students arrive in El Salvador, they will be building a school over the course of two weeks.It costs around $7,000 to build a school in the central American country, and the Rotary Club donated nine thousand dollars towards the project last month. And so, with Remax’s donation of another seven thousand on Friday, Seeds of Learning can now fund a second school. [asset|aid=1506|format=mp3player|formatter=asset_bonus|title=8355d77842801bd0872b67ae19eafaa5-Laychuck 2_2_Pub.mp3]Advertisement The students will be heading to El Salvador this summer. Photo: Members of the Seeds of Learning program accept a $7,000 donation from Remax Reality – Adam Reaburn/Energeticcity.caChildren in El Salvador will be getting another school, thanks to a $7,000 donation from Remax Reality. – Advertisement -Fort St. John Remax donated the money on Friday to the Seeds of Learning program. Instructor and organizer Derrick Laychuck says the students have now raised exactly 100 thousand dollars, over the past year.He says students paid for the trip themselves, and got 500 dollars back, through fundraising efforts. [asset|aid=1505|format=mp3player|formatter=asset_bonus|title=8355d77842801bd0872b67ae19eafaa5-Laychuck 1_2_Pub.mp3] Advertisementread more

0Shares0000Tusker FC Head Coach Sam Timbe.NAIROBI, Kenya, Mar 1- Tusker FC boss Sam Timbe is impressed by the improvement his side has recorded since their first Kenyan Premier League match of the season and remains optimistic they will perform better than they did last season.However, he has asked his charges to increase their input both on the training ground and on match days as they look to firm up and challenge for a respectable finish this season. The Ugandan tactician was forced to build up an almost entirely new team after inheriting a shell of a squad at Ruaraka, most first team players having left at the close of last season“With a well built side you come and polish from where you find but here I have had to start with new players. For them, they don’t understand my philosophy and they have to be trained into that philosophy,” Timbe told Capital Sport.Tusker FC defender Eugene Asike heads the ball away under pressure from Gor Mahia’s Eliud Loukwam during a Kenyan Premier League match at the Kenyatta Stadium in Machakos on February 28, 2018. PHOTO/Timothy OlobuluHe adds; “At times it takes long and also at times depends on the quality of the players you have. But I am happy they are picking up and showing some good football. If they get to my philosophy well, we will be okay.”Four games on, the team has amassed five points from one win and two draws having lost their opening tie away to Chemelil Sugar.Timbe talked at length of imprinting his philosophy of building play from the back whish he says the team is yet to fully grasp, but remains optimistic with more training they will be able to play perfectly well.Tusker FC team photo/Photo/TIMOTHY OLOBUUHe was disappointed in part with the tactical implementation against Gor Mahia on Wednesday, a match that ended 0-0 in Machakos but he was contend with the single point picked.“There are times we should have built up play well, but I am happy with what we got. I have added a point; it is a marathon and a step is better than nothing. We will find a way to sharpen to be in a better position,” the coach noted.The brewers switch their attention to Ulinzi Stars who they face on Sunday at the Afraha Stadium in Nakuru with Timbe looking for an improved performance from his charges.0Shares0000(Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)read more

Here’s the top transfer-related stories in Thursday’s newspapers…Manchester United have a great chance of signing Cristiano Ronaldo from Real Madrid next summer, a leading journalist has claimed. (Metro)Manchester United are plotting a sensational swoop on Leeds for rising star Charlie Taylor. The left-back is being monitored by Louis van Gaal’s side and they could launch a move in January after Luke Shaw’s horror injury. (Daily Star)Manchester United must sign TWO centre-backs in January or they will continue to struggle in Europe, says Roy Keane. (Daily Star)Carlos Vela has admitted he considered leaving Real Sociedad during the summer and refused to rule out a departure when the transfer window opens again in January. Vela was linked with West Ham in the recent window. (Sport)Jurgen Klopp is ready to snub the Premier League to replace Pep Guardiola at Bayern Munich. The German has been linked with the Liverpool job and is the favourite to replace under-fire boss Brendan Rodgers but the former Dortmund chief wants to lead Bayern, with Guardiola expected to go next summer. (Daily Mail)And here’s the latest talkSPORT.com headlines…Anthony Martial should lead the attack instead of Wayne Rooney, says Manchester United great Ruud van Nistelrooy‘I want to follow in Kevin de Bruyne’s footsteps,’ says Chelsea flop Thorgan HazardTottenham boss Mauricio Pochettino reveals tearful phone call with stricken Manchester United star Luke ShawHugo Lloris insists he is happy at Tottenham as goalkeeper rubbishes transfer talkChelsea transfer report: Blues send scouts to watch Serbian starlet as Jose Mourinho weighs up January moveTottenham transfer report: Empoli fighting to keep starlet amid interest from Premier League sideLeicester transfer report: Valencia edge ahead of Foxes in fight to land Lisbon manArsenal transfer report: January move for Real Madrid star on cards?read more

Keeping the old traditions alive at the Kerry Vintage Show. All pics by kind permission of Mary Whoriskey. Some happy faces down Kerrykeel way. KERRYKEEL VINTAGE SHOW BRINGS OUT ALL THE CHARACTERS – PIC SPECIAL was last modified: June 15th, 2014 by StephenShare this:Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)Click to share on Pocket (Opens in new window)Click to share on Telegram (Opens in new window)Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window)Click to share on Skype (Opens in new window)Click to print (Opens in new window) Tags:donegalKerrykeel Vintage Showread more

ALAMEDA — Doug Marrone wasn’t sure what to expect when he went to see Al Davis.Marrone, head coach of the Jacksonville Jaguars, was head coach at Syracuse from 2009 through 2012 and had been a Raiders sixth-round draft pick in 1986. He knew Davis, with whom he had maintained a relationship, was in failing health.Davis immediately put Marrone on the defensive.“Even near the end he was very, very sharp,” Marrone told Bay Area reporters Wednesday by conference call. “He was sharp enough that …read more

I recently read an incredible book, “The Omnivore’s Dilemma,” by Michael Pollan. He writes about the food industry—industrialized farming, huge cattle feedlots, how corn is a prevalent ingredient in almost everything we consume, and other delightful subjects. It is enough to make you stop eating altogether.One subject Pollan addresses is the idea of organic food. While its origins go back to J. I. Rodale’s magazine, “Organic Gardening and Farming,” first published in the 1940s, the organic movement began to take off in the 1970s, fueled by an idealistic generation looking for change. We have recently seen an incredible resurgence in interest in organic food, but, interestingly, much of the food labeled organic is now produced on enormous factory farms rather than by the independent, local farmers who we see displayed in the pastoral pictures on the walls of Whole Foods.This is not to say that organic food is not better than regular food, but the requirements for official organic certification are so costly that many farmers with small, natural, and sustainable operations cannot afford to have their products certified.That was a rather long way of getting to my point, which is, how are we to define “green” buildings? There is in the range of 100 different green-building programs in operation today. These are run by utilities, HBAs, cities, states, counties, nonprofit and for-profit organizations, and the U.S. government. They all have different, though similar, criteria, and varying levels of testing, from none to extensive, to certify a project as “green.”So where does that leave us? Like farmers with small, sustainable operations, there are likely contractors out there who are building green homes that meet or exceed the highest levels in the industry, but because they may not have the ability or money to certify through an official green-building program, they may not get the recognition they deserve.On the other hand, there are some programs that have a low entry level and require no independent verification of the work, thereby allowing homes to be labeled “green” that may not even meet the building and energy code, and certainly do not perform as well as other, unlabeled, homes.I don’t have an answer to this, although we may see one, or many, forthcoming in the next few years as green-building programs start the big shakeout and various governments start providing incentives and requirements for buildings to be built and remodeled green. Stay tuned—it will be a fun ride.read more

The Edinburgh Police in the United Kingdom arrested a man on Aug. 29 after a gurdwara was targeted in a suspected arson attack the day before in Leith city.Guru Nanak Gurdwara Sahib was targeted with a petrol bomb at 5.05 am on Aug. 28. Detectives believe that the Sikh temple was deliberately targeted, BBC reported. No one was injured but the building suffered damages during the attempt to set it on fire. The arson attack is being treated as a hate crime against the community, the report added.The gurdwara informed community members about the attack on its Facebook page, saying that someone tried to burn the front door of the building. It added that the place has suffered extensive smoke damage but the holy pictures were safe. It also told them that access to the gurdwara has been denied by the police until smoke clears.“Fortunately, the fire was extinguished relatively quickly and no one was injured, but nevertheless we are treating this incident with the utmost seriousness,” Police Scotland’s Detective Inspector Clark Martin, from Gayfield CID, was quoted as saying by BBC.Edinburgh Police had started investigations in this suspected hate crime attack in the Scottish capital. It arrested a 49-year-old man as part of the investigations.**UPDATE**A 49-year-old man has now been charged in connection with fires at the Sikh Temple in Sheriff Brae and Methodist Church in Junction Place, which took place in the early hours of Tuesday 28 August. He is due to appear at Edinburgh Sheriff Court on Thursday 30 August.— Edinburgh Police (@EdinburghPolice) August 29, 2018Humza Yousaf, the Scottish government’s Justice Secretary, said that he was “saddened at the news that a Sikh temple in Edinburgh was petrol-bombed,” the Independent reported. A spokesperson for Police Scotland said that the exact cause of the blaze was still unclear and was subject to investigation, it said, adding that he refused to confirm the use of a petrol bomb in the incident.“At this time we do not know if this has been a random and reckless act, or a targeted attack on the temple,” the publication quoted Inspector Andy Johnson of Leith police station as saying.The gurdwara, situated in a former church, is the only Sikh temple for the over 500-strong community in Edinburgh, the Independent reported.The gurdwara also cautioned people against any collection campaign for the restoration work. It informed them that the place is covered by insurance and will handle any repairs on its own.In a similar incident that took place on June 6 this year, a gurdwara and a mosque were set ablaze in Leeds, United Kingdom, in the wee hours. The police arrested a 42-year-old man during the investigation, treating them as hate crime incidents. The UK Home Office said in a statement in June that it will grant funds up to £56,000 per place of worship, including temples, mosques, gurdwaras and churches in England and Wales, to help protect them against hate crimes. It had said that the funding will cover the costs of security equipment like CCTV, perimeter fencing, access control gates, window locks, intruder alarm, external lighting and security doors, among others. But the cost of recruiting security personnel will not be covered. Related Itemshate crimescotlandSikhismread more